Fourth Grade Read Aloud Banquet




The Brook

I come from haunts of coot and hern,

I make a sudden sally,

And sparkle out among the fern,

To bicker down a valley.


By thirty hills I hurry down,

Or slip between the ridges;

By twenty thorps, a little town,

And half a hundred bridges.


Till last by Philip's farm I flow

To join the brimming river;

For men may come, and men may go,

But I go on forever.


I chatter over stony ways,

In little sharps and trebles,

I bubble into eddying bays,

I babble on the pebbles.


With many a curve my banks I fret

By many a field and fallow,

And many a fairy foreland set

With willow-weed and mallow.


I chatter, chatter, as I flow

To join the brimming river,

For men may come, and men may go,

But I go on forever.


I wind about, and in and out,

With here a blossom sailing,

And here and there a lusty trout,

And here and there a grayling,


And here and there a foamy flake

Upon me, as I travel,

With many a silvery water-break

Above the golden gravel,


And draw them all along, and flow

To join the brimming river,

For men may come, and men may go,

But I go on forever.


I steal by lawns and grassy plots,

I slide by hazel covers;

I move the sweet forget-me-nots

That grow for happy lovers.


I slip, I slide, I gloom, I glance,

Among my skimming swallows;

I make the netted sunbeam dance

Against my sandy shallows.


I murmur under moon and stars

In brambly wildernesses;

I linger by my shingly bars,

I loiter round my cresses;


And out again I curve and flow

To join the brimming river;

For men may come, and men may go,

But I go on forever.


  Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Week 23 Tragedy in the Graveyard from The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain The Story of the Mayflower from Our Island Story by H. E. Marshall Silk from The Story Book of Science by Jean Henri Fabre Danes to the Rescue from The Little Duke by Charlotte M. Yonge The Declaration of Independence from The Struggle for Sea Power by M. B. Synge The Flying Trunk from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Across the Lake by Lisa M. Ripperton The Feast beside the Sea and What Followed It from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
The Life of the Knight from Heroes of the Middle Ages by Eva March Tappan A Chapter of Things To Hear This Spring from The Spring of the Year by Dallas Lore Sharp Benjamin Franklin from Builders of Our Country: Book I by Gertrude van Duyn Southworth The Youth, the Hawk, and the Raven from The Tortoise and the Geese and Other Fables of Bidpai by Maude Barrows Dutton Baldur's Doom from The Children of Odin: A Book of Northern Myths by Padraic Colum The Family Exodus from The Bee People by Margaret Warner Morley Woven and Then Spun from The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald
Ariel's Song by William Shakespeare The Violet by Jane Taylor The Flower by Alfred Lord Tennyson Hymn of Pan by Percy Bysshe Shelley Lullaby for Titania from Poems by William Shakespeare   By Bendemeer's Stream by Thomas Moore
First row Previous row          Next row Last row
The Aesop for Children  by Milo Winter

The Stag, the Sheep and the Wolf

One day a Stag came to a Sheep and asked her to lend him a measure of wheat. The Sheep knew him for a very swift runner, who could easily take himself out of reach, were he so inclined. So she asked him if he knew someone who would answer for him.

"Yes, yes," answered the Stag confidently, "the Wolf has promised to be my surety."


[Illustration]

"The Wolf!" exclaimed the Sheep indignantly. "Do you think I would trust you on such security? I know the Wolf! He takes what he wants and runs off with it without paying. As for you, you can use your legs so well that I should have little chance of collecting the debt if I had to catch you for it!"

Two blacks do not make a white.